My understanding is detune is tuning down, hence de-tune, like what Digitech Whammy does. Joe Satriani uses his a lot. But wait...that might be pitch shifting.
The Eventide (or models of it) is the best for it since it allows each voice to be detuned and/or delayed. Add in a Tri-Chorus and some compression and you get to the Micheal Landeau sound.
For the record, classic chorus effect is a copy of the original signal, slightly delayed with the delay time modulated and mixed back into the original signal. If you remove the original signal you get vibrato. Classic pedal flanging is the same with a shorter delay and the signal fedback into the original as well. (The feedback/resonance is this and the Manual is the delay time). You can have multi voice chorus as well. This is different than detune as the pitch of the effected signal is changing, with detune it is typically fixed.
My understanding is detune is tuning down, hence de-tune, like what Digitech Whammy does. Joe Satriani uses his a lot. But wait...that might be pitch shifting.
It is but it has a detune function in the chorus setting.
I’m assuming that was the OP’s reference and not actually using a pedal that detunes your guitar like the digitech drop…?
I think some people are mixing up Harmonizer and Harmonizing. You can use a Harmonizer for harmonizing dialing a 3rd, 5th or oct. You can also use a Harmonizer to detune by a couple of cents. Most Harmonizers will be able to pull off both functions.
Correct. The detune function in the Mobius is a chorusing effect and not dropping pitch like the Digitech does.
LLL described it pretty accurately above.
You can set it to be very present in your tone, like Eddie did in the Van Hagar years but I have mine set much more subtle. More like a thickener. You as a player will notice when it’s not there but it’s not something the listener would probably notice.
Yes, a chorus uses some subtle LFO shifting. It is nowhere near what we would call true detuning. To achieve detuning the way we look at it, a harmonizer of some type is needed. Eddie, Vai and Holdsworth all needed a harmonizer to pull off this effect.
Yes, a chorus uses some subtle LFO shifting. It is nowhere near what we would call true detuning. To achieve detuning the way we look at it, a harmonizer of some type is needed. Eddie, Vai and Holdsworth all needed a harmonizer to pull off this effect.